Barbara’s story begins on a Greek Island in the Aegean Sea…

“I was born in a two-room house, in a small fishing village on the Island of Paros. In my village community, as I remember it, there was a yiayia – a grandmother – in every house, and I thought they were all mine. When my mother, Margarita, 9 year old brother Yianni, 3 l/2 year old sister, Calypso and my 2 l/2 year old self, departed our Greek Island home bound for America to join my father, Anastasios, I left with vivid images of teary-eyed village folks, young and old, lining narrow, winding village streets, waving goodbye. While I was only 2 l/2, I remember that day as though it were yesterday…thus began my journey as a story teller, story listener…”


“This website - like the story of my life - is a work-in-progress. I dedicate it to everyone who has told me a story or listened to mine – especially the students at St. Joseph’s School for the Deaf (Bronx, NY), The Lexington School (Queens, NY) and Bernard Bragg and John Basinger of the National Theatre of the Deaf, who taught me new ways of listening to the world and telling my stories.” – Barbara

“Replacing the word speech with communication offers a broad domain and may have a significant impact on future teaching strategies.” -Source Unknown

Barbara, an award-winning storyteller, is nationally known for performing and producing storytelling events in voice and/or sign language on television, in theaters, schools, libraries, community centers and festivals. She has the unique ability to communicate with people of all ages – hearing and Deaf - including English Language Learners and individuals with special needs.

Her programs, designed to encourage people to celebrate all cultures through the art of storytelling in all its forms (spoken word, sign/mime, dance, music and visual art) represent an ethnographic kaleidoscope of folklore around the globe and have been described as true celebrations of diversity. Her repertoire includes: stories about her immigrant childhood; her adult life in the bustling multiethnic borough of Queens*; anecdotes/stories culled from 27 years experience working with multilingual, linguistically diverse populations of all ages and, for the younger set, popular picture books adapted for telling center stage.
 


 

  Barbara’s high-energy workshops/presentations are tailored to meet needs of clients and are recommended for staff development, sensitivity training, parent groups, young adults, conferences and festivals.

Holds a BA in the Performing Arts from Empire State College (SUNY) with a concentration in Total Communication and Performance. She has studied with some of America’s leading storytellers, including Donald Davis, Doug Lipman, Jay O’Callahan, and Bernard Bragg and John Basinger of the National Theatre of the Deaf.
*Since the spring of 2002 Barbara has facilitated on-going Story Sharing Workshops sponsored by the Flushing Jewish Community Council. During these gatherings she has exchanged stories with immigrants from Africa, Asia, Australia, Europe, the Middle East, North and South America, The Caribbean and folks born and bred in the U.S.A.


 

Professional Affiliations

Flushing Jewish Community Council www.flushingjcc.org
The Voelker-Orth Museum www.vom.org
The Poppenhusen Institute www.poppenhuseninstitute.org
National Storytelling Network www.nsn.org
League for the Advancement of New England Storytelling www.lanes.org
Elders Share the Arts www.elderssharethearts.org; Music For Many, Inc.
African Folk Heritage Circle, Inc